Most Muslim coverage 'negative'
Researchers looking at the way British Muslims are represented by the media say 
they have found that most coverage is negative in tone.


A Cardiff University team behind the study looked at nearly 1,000 newspaper 
articles from the past eight years.

Two-thirds focused on terrorism or cultural differences, and much of it used 
words such as militancy, radicalism and fundamentalist.

The research was commissioned by Channel Four's Dispatches.


Dr Paul Mason, a member of the team, said the team looked at three areas.

They carried out a statistical analysis looking at types of stories and the way 
Muslims were described and the language used, the photographs used alongside 
the stories and they analysed the types of case studies used.

He said: "We looked at both nouns and adjectives and the way in which British 
Muslims were described.
"And we found the highest proportion of nouns used were about things like 
extremism, suicide bombers, militancy, radicalism - which accounted for over 
35% of the adjectives used about British Muslims - fanatic, fundamentalist - 
those kinds of languages were used.

"And Islam was portrayed or constructed in the language as dangerous or 
backward or as a threat," he said.


The team found that since the attacks of 11 September 2001 in the United States 
and 7 July 2005 in London there had been an increase in stories about British 
Muslims and this peaked to more than 4,000 in 2006.

'Perceived threat'

Mr Mason added: "What you have to be careful of here is to watch the kind of 
generalisation of the very, very small number of people that are involved in 
political violence of any kind and the generalisation about Islam which is 
carried out by the newspapers.

"So following 9/11 and 7/7 of course there is a perceived threat from the 
public and the public are concerned about political violence.

"But it is wholly wrong to make what the newspapers do in the generalisation of 
those who carry out public violence to the whole of Islam and the whole of the 
British Muslim community."

He said there were concerns that journalists and editors may have sought to 
appeal to their own readership about some perceived threat to British unity or 
values.

"You get these inaccurate stories about this threat of there is going to be 
more mosques than churches, which is a complete nonsense.

"There are roughly 900 mosques and there are 42,000 churches, so this is a 
ridiculous report."

The Channel Four documentary, It Shouldn't Happen To A Muslim, investigated 
whether the 7/7 London bombings and the fear of terrorism had fuelled a rise in 
violence, intolerance and hatred against British Muslims.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/wales/7495384.stm 

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